Meitnerium - Mt

General Information

Discovery

Meitnurium was first made in 1982 by Peter Armbruster, Gottfried Munzenberg and co-workers at the GSI in Darmstadt, Germany.

Appearance

Unknown, but probably metallic grey in appearance.

Source

A transuranium element. Less than 10 atoms of meitnerium have ever been made, and it will probably never be isolated in observable quantities. Created by a so-called cold fusion method, in which a target of bismuth is bombarded with atoms of iron.

Uses

Unknown.

Biological Role

None.

General Information

A synthetic element created via nuclear bombardment, few atoms have ever been made and the properties of meitnerium are very poorly understood. It is a radioactive metal which does not occur naturally and is of research interest only. The first atoms were made via a nuclear reaction, the cold fusion method:

209Bi + 58Fe ®  266Mt + n



  Physical Information    
  Atomic Number   109
  Relative Atomic Mass (12C=12.000)   266
  Melting Point/K   not available
  Boiling Point/K   not available
  Density/kg m-3   not available
  Ground State Electron Configuration   [Rn]5f146d77s2
  Electron Affinity(M-M-)/kJ mol-1   not available


  Key Isotopes        
  nuclide 266Mt      
  atomic mass 266.14      
  natural abundance 0%      
  half-life approx 3.4x10-3 secs      
           


Other Information  
Enthalpy of Fusion/kJ mol-1 n/a
Enthalpy of Vaporisation/kJ mol-1 n/a
     
Oxidation States  
Mt+2 has been predicted as probably the most stable state.
  Ionisation Energies/kJ mol-1
  M - M+ 840 (est)
  M+ - M2+  
  M2+ - M3+  
  M3+ - M4+  
  M4+ - M5+  
  M5+ - M6+  
  M6+ - M7+  
  M7+ - M8+  
  M8+ - M9+  
  M9+ - M10+